Linking the left brain and the right brain

How many agile methodologies are there? If you were to include variations on a theme, I think the number would be almost infinite. Let’s stick to basics. Here’s a brief rundown of the approaches that software development teams can use to be agile:

Scrum – Probably, the most widely used agile approach — if you include the many variations often referred to as “Scrum-but”. Scrum is lightweight, easy to adopt, but hard to do well.

eXtreme Programming (XP) – More complete and rigorous than Scrum. It covers many aspects of writing good software, not just the planning and testing.

Kanban – Patterned after the Toyota manufacturing system. It works on the principle of the team pulling work from a queue rather than having the work pushed at them. Limiting work-in-progress is key.

Lean Software Development – As the name implies, this approach seeks to minimize waste in every aspect of development. It shares some concepts with Kanban as they are both used at Toyota.

Crystal – This is actually a family of methodologies. It is adaptable because different situations may require variations on the core themes.

Feature-Driven Development (FDD) – Software is built as a collection of small and valuable features as determined by the business. Iterations are short and feature-driven.

Test-Driven Development (TDD) – A derivative of XP and not a separate methodology. It relies on writing tests before writing the underlying code and can be used in conjunction with any of the approaches above.

Intro

Welcome to BrainsLink.com - a blog written by Vin D'Amico about enterprise agile and its use in software development and business operations with occasional forays into open-source software and emerging technologies.